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- #21
NevadaMike
WKR
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- Aug 4, 2020
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Great idea thanks!Bipod is bouncing
you need carpet or something on the bench
Great idea thanks!Bipod is bouncing
you need carpet or something on the bench
Ok then stability shouldn't be a problem. (Will cause bad accuracy at distance with simultaneous good accuracy at 100)Twist is 1:8
No, it's a wobble. So the path is somewhat like a tight corkscrew. Ever seen someone throw a football that wobbles for a short distance and then smooths out and flies straight? It's like that only a bit faster. This is why almost all short-range benchrest shooters use flat base bullets. They stabilize quicker.So if the bullet is heading to the right at 100 yards and goes to sleep, it veers to the left past 100 yards? And bullets going left veer right? Low bullets veer up? High bullets veer down? How do they know when and where to veer?
The Nosler "tech" is using imaginary science.No, it's a wobble. So the path is somewhat like a tight corkscrew. Ever seen someone throw a football that wobbles for a short distance and then smooths out and flies straight? It's like that only a bit faster. This is why almost all short-range benchrest shooters use flat base bullets. They stabilize quicker.
I shot several 0.68 inch groups of 5 (100 yd).
Then I shot several 1 inch groups at 200. No way! (I thought). I alternated groups at 100/200/100. The 200 yd groups were never once 2x as big as the 100 yd groups. I called Nosler tech support with pictures, and they were like, "yeah, you found it. That is indeed a thing".
You saidThe Nosler "tech" is using imaginary science.
Brian Litz, the ballistician from Berger, has had an open challenge since 2015, to anyone that could prove non-linear dispersion (bullets going to sleep). In 9 years it has never happened.
You are comparing 2 seperate groups. If you want real data, set up a target at 100 yards and a target behind it at 300 yards. Shoot thru the first one and into the second one.
What you will find is 1) the group shape is always the same 2) the group at 300 yards is always 3 times larger than the one at 100 yards.
Always a possibility but my Leupold scopes have always been good. I am going to load up a new batch and I will test at 100 again but I had two touching just before dialing out to 300. It was not submitted to a drop test yet.I wonder if your Mk4hd crapped out. Have a reliable scope you can put on there?
I think the point @Axlrod was trying to make is that actual experts on the subject completely disagree with your above statement.4 dispersion is always linear with distance.
It is not.
Have you listened to the external ballistics episodes? I think Jayden understands what's going on, and can substantiate it. There are also publications by Litz, and the government on the matter. I'm not an engineer, but I've read and listened to a lot of context on the subject trying to comprehend it, so I'll take a stab. The way I understand it, there is an initial yaw cycle and the bullets do "go to sleep" (gyroscopically stabilize), and then velocity, center of gravity, center of pressure, drag, wind deflection, etc., determines what happens downrange. The conflict is that yaw cycle doesn't effect the flight path the way people who believe in non-linear dispersion think it does, and has never been proven in formal testing. Same as "nodes" identified in Audette ladder tests. Longer range shots in a real world environment induces the potential for physical characteristics or effects like wind deflection, drag, magnus, Coriolis, to possibly show up and further increase dispersion.any aeronautical/astronautical engineers on here that can talk intelligently about 4 and 6 DOF aerodynamics and explain in detail how/why "going to sleep" doesn't actually happen?
no disrespect to hornady, but they do not have the $ to afford the folks who actually understand aerodynamics and ballistics at this level.
No, I'm pretty sure he says that. Just that there technically IS a yaw cycle before gyroscopically stabilizing.i have listend to them, and recall Jamie saying explicitly that they do not go to sleep in a manner that results in smaller groups at longer ranges. It's been a few months, and I was driving in heavy traffic, so maybe i misheard.
I was going to say, he dives pretty deep into 4 DOF and 6 DOF in a couple episodes. I actually listened to the 4 DOF one yesterday and will have to probably listen to it a few more times to get it to sink in (I listen while driving so sometimes what I retain is patchy too) because that's some dense material.also, realized an error in my previous post, meant to call out Nosler, who supplied the info in post 35.